Narayan / Singh / Sinha | Handbook of Management of Zoonoses | Buch | 978-981-99-9884-5 | www.sack.de

Buch, Englisch, 1134 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 2149 g

Narayan / Singh / Sinha

Handbook of Management of Zoonoses


1. Auflage 2024
ISBN: 978-981-99-9884-5
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore

Buch, Englisch, 1134 Seiten, Format (B × H): 160 mm x 241 mm, Gewicht: 2149 g

ISBN: 978-981-99-9884-5
Verlag: Springer Nature Singapore


This book reviews the etiology of major zoonotic diseases, their impact on human health, and control mechanisms for better management. It also examines factors influencing transmission, diagnosis, treatment, management, and prevention of zoonotic diseases caused by different human pathogens, including bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoans, and parasites. It also introduces zoonoses with a wildlife reservoir and discusses different transmission modes, and factors that influence the epidemiology of zoonoses. It further discusses the holistic strategies for the cost-effective prevention and control of these zoonoses. Towards the end, the book also discusses infections that have spread from non-human primates to humans and strategies to improve disease control and elimination. This book is very useful for students, academicians, and researchers of veterinary sciences, veterinary medicine, and, veterinary public health.

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 )      Chapter 1- ZOONOSES

•  Definition

•  Classification

•  Origin, emergence and re-emergence of zoonoses

•  Evolution of methods of managing/controlling zoonoses

2)     Chapter 2-VIRAL ZOONOSES

A) Human to human transmission (1-129)

1. Ebola

2. Marburg

3. SARS -1

4. MERS

5. SARS-2

6. Dengue

7. Chikungunya

8. Zika

9. Yellow Fever

B) TRANSITION -TO ZOONOTIC VIRUSES

10. Influenza viruses- some basics

a. Evolution- antigenic shift, host switching

b. The Hong Kong (H5N1) virus 1997

c. Avian influenza

d.H7N9

e. H1N1

f. H3N2

11. Nipah

Chapter 3- Mosquito borne viruses

1. Japanese Encephalitis

2. St. Louis encephalitis

3. EEE

4. WEE

5.  Australian Encephalitis

6.  Ross River

7.  WN-Kunjin

8.  California, La Crosse

9.  Rift Valley Fever

10.  West Nile

11.  O’ Nyong Nyong

12.  Colorado Tick fever

13.   Powassan virus

14.   Kyasanur Forest Disease

15.   Crimean Congo Haemorrhagic Fever

VIRAL ZOONOSES (1-72)

1.  Hanta

2.   Rabies

3.  RVF

Chapter 4- BACTERIAL ZOONOSES

1. Anthrax

2. Anaplasmosis: A phagocytophilum

3.  Bartonellosis

•     Bacillary angiomatosis (BA): B. henselae and B. quintana

•     Cat scratch fever/disease (CSF/CSD): B. henselae, B. clarridgeiae

•      Oroya Fever or Carrion’s disease: B. bacilliforms

•      Trench fever: B. quintana

4.     Ehrlichiosis: E.chaffeensis; E. ewingii; E. canis, Neorickettsia sennetsu and recently described Panola mountain Ehrlichia species genetically closely related to E. ruminantium

5. Borreliosis

6. Lyme Disease: B. burgdorferi sensu lato

7.  Southern Tick-Associated Rash Illness (STARI) or Masters’ disease: B. lonestari

8.  Louse borne relapsing fever: B. recurrentis

9.  Tularemia: Francisella tularensis

10. Q fever

11. Leptospirosis

12. Glanders

13. Mycobacteriosis -Part 1 Classical tuberculosis

14. Mycobacteriosis - Part 2 Zoonotic mycobacteriosis

15. Plague

16. Brucellosis

Chapter 5- CHLAMYDIAL AND RICKETTSIAL ZOONOSES

1. Rocky Mountain Spotted fever

2. Indian tick typhus

3. African tick typhus

4. Scrub typhus-O. tsutsugamushi

5. Murine (Epidemic) typhus

6. Rickettsial pox – R. akari

Chapter 6- MYCOTIC ZOONOSES

Introduction

Mycotoxicosis

Aspergillosis

Blastomycosis

Candidiasis

Coccidioidomycosis

Cryptococcosis

Dermatomycosis

Histoplasmosis

Mucoromycosis

Rhinosporidiosis

Sporotrichosis

Chapter 7-Parasitic zoonoses

Epidemiology of parasitic zoonoses

A) PROTOZOAL ZOONOSES

Trypanosomiasis

Amoebiasis

Babesiosis

Chagas ’ disease

Cryptosporidiosis

Giardiasisis

Leishmaniasis- Cutaneous & Visceral

Sarcocystosis

Toxoplasmosis

B) HELMINTHIC ZOONOSES

1. Trematodiases

Epidemiology of fish borne trematodiasis

Clonorchiasis

Dicroceliasis

Echinostoma

Fascioliasis

Gastrodiscoidiasis

Intestinal flukes- Fasciolopsis buski

Heterophyiasis

Opisthorchiasis

Paragonimiasis-Lung fluke

2. Cestodiases

Coenurosis

Cysticercosis

Diphyllobothriasis

Dipylidiasis

Dipylinum caninum

Hydatidosis

Taeniasis

Rallietina spp.

Sparagonosis

Hymenolpiasis

3. Nematodiases

Fish-borne nematodiasis

Ancylostomiasis

Anisakiasis

Angiostrogylosis

Capillariasis

Dracunculiasis

Gnathostomiasis

Larva Migrans

Schistosomiasis

Trichinellosis

Trichostrongylus

Toxocariasis

Chapter 9- Ectoparasites

Louse borne diseases

Tick paralysis

Zoonotic ectoparasites

Chapter 10-Wildlife as Reservoir of Zoonoses

• Introduction

• Opportunities of contact and transmission

•  Preventive measures

•  Preventing wildlife originated zoonoses

Chapter 11-Non-human primates as reservoir

Chapter 12-Rodents as Reservoir

Chapter 13-Bat- natural reservoir of zoonotic viruses

Chapter 14-Vectors as carrier of zoonoses


Dr Krishna Gopal Narayan  was theDean of, the Faculty of Veterinary Sciences and Animal Husbandry in Birsa Agricultural University. He remained engaged actively for 39 years in veterinary education and research in various capacities and is continuing his academic interest. He has been a rank officer – beginning as House surgeon-cum-Demonstrator in Bihar Veterinary College, Patna, Bihar in 1959, kept on changing positions through selection, as Assistant Professor, in Panjab Agricultural University, Punjab and Associate Professor in Haryana Agricultural University, Haryana. He moved on to Rajendra Agricultural University, Jharkhand as a Professor of Veterinary Public Health and Epidemiology.He is the Fellow of National Academy of Veterinary Science (NAVS), Indian Public Health Association (IPHA), Indian Association of Veterinary Public Health Specialists (IAVPHS) and Association of Public Health Veteribarians (APHV). He is the recipient of the prestigious Fakhruddin Ali Ahmed Award for Outstanding Research in Tribal Farming Systems of Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR). The IAVPHS and the APHV conferred him with Lifetime Achievement Award for his outstanding contributions to the veterinary profession in general and Veterinary Public Health and Epidemiology in particular.

He has numerous research publications in peer-reviewed national and international journals and a few chapters in books.

Dr Dharmendra Kumar Sinha, Principal Scientist is a senior faculty of Veterinary Public Health and Epidemiology at ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar, India. His fields of research are monitoring and surveillance, seroepidemiology, investigation of animal disease outbreaks, meta-analysis and economic losses due to animal diseases. DrSinha has served as a referee for a number of journals including Indian Journal of Comparative Microbiology, Immunology and Infectious Diseases; Journal of Applied Animal Research; Indian Journal of Animal Science; Journal of Veterinary Public Health,Frontiers in Microbiology,Nutrition and Food Technology: Open Access.

He has published various research papers in peer-reviewed national and international journals. He is a member of many scientific societies like Indian Association of Veterinary Microbiology, Immunology and Infectious Diseases, Indian Association of Veterinary Public Health Specialists, Society for Immunology and Immunopathology, ARS Scientists Forum.

Dr Dhirendra Kumar Singh is retired Principal Scientist, Division of Veterinary Public Health, ICAR-Indian Veterinary Research Institute, Izatnagar, India. His research interest has been Foodborne Infections and Intoxications and Zoonoses with extensive work on brucellosis, particularly diagnosis and epidemiology. Dr Singh has served as a referee for numerous national and international journals including Indian Journal of Comparative Microbiology, Immunology and Infectious Diseases; Journal of Applied Animal Research; Tropical Animal Health and production; Comparative Immunology, Microbiology and Infectious Diseases.

He has to his credit various research publications in peer-reviewed national and international journals and a few chapters in book. He has served as member of various National Expert Bodies especially for control of Brucellosis and Beaureau of Indian Standards (BIS). He is a member of many scientific societies like Indian Association of Veterinary Microbiology, Immunology and Infectious Diseases; Indian Society of Veterinary Immunologists and Biotechnologists; Indian Association for Advancement of Veterinary Research; Indian Public Health Association.



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